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Highly Efficient Broadband Yellow Phosphor Based on Zero-Dimensional Tin Mixed-Halide Perovskite

214

Citations

22

References

2017

Year

Abstract

Organic-inorganic hybrid metal halide perovskites have emerged as a highly promising class of light emitters, which can be used as phosphors for optically pumped white light-emitting diodes (WLEDs). By controlling the structural dimensionality, metal halide perovskites can exhibit tunable narrow and broadband emissions from the free-exciton and self-trapped excited states, respectively. Here, we report a highly efficient broadband yellow light emitter based on zero-dimensional tin mixed-halide perovskite (C<sub>4</sub>N<sub>2</sub>H<sub>14</sub>Br)<sub>4</sub>SnBr<sub>x</sub>I<sub>6-x</sub> (x = 3). This rare-earth-free ionically bonded crystalline material possesses a perfect host-dopant structure, in which the light-emitting metal halide species (SnBr<sub>x</sub>I<sub>6-x</sub><sup>4-</sup>, x = 3) are completely isolated from each other and embedded in the wide band gap organic matrix composed of C<sub>4</sub>N<sub>2</sub>H<sub>14</sub>Br<sup>-</sup>. The strongly Stokes-shifted broadband yellow emission that peaked at 582 nm from this phosphor, which is a result of excited state structural reorganization, has an extremely large full width at half-maximum of 126 nm and a high photoluminescence quantum efficiency of ∼85% at room temperature. UV-pumped WLEDs fabricated using this yellow emitter together with a commercial europium-doped barium magnesium aluminate blue phosphor (BaMgAl<sub>10</sub>O<sub>17</sub>:Eu<sup>2+</sup>) can exhibit high color rendering indexes of up to 85.

References

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